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MMW

The document discusses Venn diagrams and KenKen puzzles. It provides an example of using a Venn diagram to determine the total number of students who took only one course. It then explains the basic rules of KenKen puzzles, including that numbers cannot be repeated in rows or columns and cages must produce the target number using the specified operation. It notes that a 4x4 puzzle uses numbers 1-4 while a 6x6 puzzle uses 1-6.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
334 views5 pages

MMW

The document discusses Venn diagrams and KenKen puzzles. It provides an example of using a Venn diagram to determine the total number of students who took only one course. It then explains the basic rules of KenKen puzzles, including that numbers cannot be repeated in rows or columns and cages must produce the target number using the specified operation. It notes that a 4x4 puzzle uses numbers 1-4 while a 6x6 puzzle uses 1-6.

Uploaded by

Strikeeter
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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Download as DOC, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd

Venn Diagrams

Example No.1
Step 1 :

Venn diagram related to the information given in the question:

Step 2 :

From the venn diagram above, we have

No. of students who had taken only math = 24

No. of students who had taken only chemistry = 60

No. of students who had taken only physics = 22

Step 3 :

Total no. of students who had taken only one cour


= 24 + 60 + 22
= 106

Hence, the total number of students who had taken only one course is 106
Example No.1
Step 1 :

Venn diagram related to the information given in the question:

Step 2 :

Total number of students in the group

= 28 + 12 + 18 + 7 + 10 + 17 + 8

= 100

Hence, the total number of students in the group is 100


KenKen Puzzle

Rules for KenKen


It's hard to learn the rules all at once before interacting with the puzzle, so just the briefest
introduction to the rules makes sense before diving in. Start with a 4x4 puzzle, like the
one shown here.

The only numbers you may write are 1, 2, 3, or 4. (A 6x6 puzzle requires 1 through 6.)
No numbers may appear more than once in any row or column. (That is, all required
numbers must appear in every row and column.)
Each "cage" (region bounded by a heavy border) contains a "target number." If there's
more than one cell in the cage, the target is also accompanied by an arithmetic operation.
You must fill that cage with numbers that produce the target number, using only the
specified arithmetic operation. Numbers may be repeated within a cage, if necessary, as
long as they do not repeat within a single row or column.
In a one-cell cage, just write the target number in that cell.
KenKen Puzzle &
Venn Diagrams
(Math in Modern
World)
Submitted By:
Mervin Abante
Michelle Mayuyu
John lawrence Echevarria
Jhoanna Nicole Lagunilla
Pauleen Rivera

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